And one of the things mentioned is that like Cursor is the only company making money in tech. If everyone is attacking the coding space and not finding unique product market fit elsewhere.
It's worth noting that Ed is a PR guy. He's not dumb, but be often adopts whatever (strongly, loosely-held) opinions will get him the most attention for his business and micro-media empire.
> We might be in a bubble.
Even pre-computing (think electric light and the telegraph), there's never been a notable new technology that didn't have a "bubble" phase as part of the normal technology adoption lifecycle. It's even codified into things like the Gartner Hype Cycle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gartner_hype_cycle). The companies who don't find product/market fit will die, which is fine and normal.
techpineapple|7 months ago
I listened to this podcast last night: https://www.lastweekinaws.com/podcast/screaming-in-the-cloud...
And one of the things mentioned is that like Cursor is the only company making money in tech. If everyone is attacking the coding space and not finding unique product market fit elsewhere.
We might be in a bubble.
CharlesW|7 months ago
Why?
> I listened to this podcast last night:
It's worth noting that Ed is a PR guy. He's not dumb, but be often adopts whatever (strongly, loosely-held) opinions will get him the most attention for his business and micro-media empire.
> We might be in a bubble.
Even pre-computing (think electric light and the telegraph), there's never been a notable new technology that didn't have a "bubble" phase as part of the normal technology adoption lifecycle. It's even codified into things like the Gartner Hype Cycle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gartner_hype_cycle). The companies who don't find product/market fit will die, which is fine and normal.